His name is Randy Thomasson, and he heads the conservative policy watchdog Save California. On Wednesday, the group held a press conference outside San Francisco City Hall to protest the honor, spitting distance from where Milk was assasinated in 1978. Using a series of visual aids, Thomasson argued that the civil rights crusader was unfit for the nation's highest civilian honor.

"Is this for the Onion? Come on, this must be for the Onion," a casual observer announced to no one in particular.

In a city where every third public building and charity breakfast is named for Milk, the conference was well attended by the local press. All in all, a half dozen showed up, along with a couple of photographers and another ten reporters, who flanked the camera-ready Thomasson and his posse.

"I'm always curious who's exercising their right to assembly," said Steven Tritto, an observer who had stepped out to give his maltese Gusto a breather while he waited for a friend at a job interview. "And I'm always interested in who's getting attention from the media."

Others were less diplomatic.

"They're honoring a man. It's just like honoring Caesar Chavez. Caeser wasn't perfect," said Dan Barber, a gay denizen of the city for more than 30 years. "Was Jesus Christ perfect?"

In addition to protesting Milk's Medal of Freedom, Thomasson is also fighting a proposed Harvey Milk Day in California schools, and the "sexual indoctrination of kindergarteners." He told CBS and MSNBC that the president had made "a mistake" by honoring Milk, one he was anxious that Gov. Arnold Shwarzenegger not repeat.

"Harvey Milk 'Gay' Day will rope school children into confusion," he said, adding that honoring Milk in California's public schools "would promote the homosexual-bisexual-transsexual agenda...to up to six million children."